v.Pitts, Robert.Organized
Labor and the Negro in Seattle.Seattle:
Unpublished Economics MA Thesis, UW, 1941. p39-42, (p42 says “the
‘Wobblies’ won the respect of the Negro longshoreman in spite of its
radicalism. Few Negroes, however, joined the I.W.W.”)

vi.Pitts, p51 “Negroes as a rule failed to be attracted to the radical
movement. Despite the fact that members of the I.W.W. had proved to be the
greatest champions of their cause on the waterfront, Negro longshoremen felt
that direct affiliation with this organization would prove detrimental to their
cause.”

7.Geloneck, Bill. “The Role of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in the
Japanese Exclusion Act of 1924.”WSU
Archives.W.S.U. Department Of
Communications (History of Communications).Class Papers, 1956-1978.Box
2, Folder 8.

6.Collections of decisions of Supreme Court of the United States affecting
Japanese land cases in the states of Washington and California, by Northwest
American Japanese Association .[Seattle]
Northwest American Japanese Assoc., 1924

7.BACKGROUND:Nelson, Douglas
W. “THE ALIEN LAND LAW MOVEMENT OF THE LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY.”Journal of the West 1970 9(1): 46-59.

8.Ngai, Mae M.“The Strange
Career of the Illegal Alien: Immigration Restriction and Deportation Policy in
the United States, 1921-1965.”Law
and History Review 2003 21(1): 69-107

9.Ngai, Mae M.Impossible
subjects : illegal aliens and the making of modern America.Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c2004

i.Cayton, Long Old Road (about doctor coercing wife to get tubes tied)

ii.Others?

1.1921

a.Taylor, Quintard.Forging
of a Black Community: Seattle’s Central District from 1870 through the Civil
Rights Era.Seattle: University
of Washington Press, 1994, pp, 89-90, source is “bulletin of Mrs. Saul Hall to
house bill #36” march 14 1921 NAACP

People
in motion, the postwar adjustment of the evacuated Japanese Americans.
United States Dept. of the Interior, War Agency Liquidation Unit, formerly
War Relocation Authority.Washington,
U.S. Govt. Print. Off. [1947]

Howard
Droker.“Seattle Race
Relations during the Second World War” from Experiences in a Promised
Land…p366 “Charlie Doyle (representing the central labor council), he
was a wild one.He said, ‘You
bring them back, we won’t be responsible for how many are hanging from the
lamp posts.’… Dave Beck, head of the Teamsters union, was a prominent
spokesman for the opponents of Japanese return.”

9.Dye, Douglas Mark.The
Soul of the City: The Work of the Seattle Council of Churches During World War
II.Unpublished History PhD
Dissertation, Washington State University, 1997.Chapter 4, “The Council and the Japanese Return to Seattle,” pp.
121-150.

Richardson,
Larry Samuel.Civil Rights
in Seattle: A Rhetorical Analysis of a Social Movement.Unpublished Speech PhD Dissertation, WSU, 1975.Chapter 5, “Segregation in Education: The Triad and a School
Boycott,” pp 157-202.